Japanese gaming company KLab recently announced an interesting financial move: planning to create a "BTC + Gold" hybrid investment portfolio with 3.6 billion yen. Allocated in a 60:40 ratio, this means the majority goes to Bitcoin, with gold serving as a supplement.
As of December 25th, they have already entered the market in batches, purchasing a total of 3.17 BTC at an average cost of approximately 13.83 million yen per coin. They also didn't forget to allocate to gold ETFs, indicating that the company aims to find a balance between traditional assets and crypto assets. This "dual-track" allocation approach reflects many institutions' recognition of BTC's long-term value, while also paying for gold's hedging properties.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
13 Likes
Reward
13
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
BrokenRugs
· 3h ago
klab, this move is pretty good. Major institutions are finally starting to pay serious attention to BTC. The 6 to 4 configuration isn't too aggressive; it seems they want to be more cautious.
View OriginalReply0
FOMOmonster
· 3h ago
Wow, even game companies are starting to hoard coins. This is a sign of the trend.
View OriginalReply0
LadderToolGuy
· 3h ago
Haha, this operation is really interesting. Game companies are also starting to play with allocations.
BTC is the main course, gold is just insurance.
3.17 coins is quite a lot. Entering gradually like this is still stable.
Speaking of which, if institutions are all doing this allocation, should we retail investors follow suit?
View OriginalReply0
NFTBlackHole
· 3h ago
Institutions are already allocating 60:40 to BTC, and we're still debating whether to get on board. LOL
Japanese gaming company KLab recently announced an interesting financial move: planning to create a "BTC + Gold" hybrid investment portfolio with 3.6 billion yen. Allocated in a 60:40 ratio, this means the majority goes to Bitcoin, with gold serving as a supplement.
As of December 25th, they have already entered the market in batches, purchasing a total of 3.17 BTC at an average cost of approximately 13.83 million yen per coin. They also didn't forget to allocate to gold ETFs, indicating that the company aims to find a balance between traditional assets and crypto assets. This "dual-track" allocation approach reflects many institutions' recognition of BTC's long-term value, while also paying for gold's hedging properties.